Monday, December 7, 2015

Gold and jewels on board Spanish ship the San José that sank 300 years ago off Colombia could be worth billions
The wreck of a Spanish galleon laden with treasure has been found 300 years after it was sunk by the British, sparking speculation that it contains the most valuable haul ever found on the seabed.

Oil painting by Samuel Scott depicting the action off Cartagena, 28 May 1708

The Colombian president, Juan Manuel Santos, announced the find and said a museum would be built to display the artefacts, which are thought to include gold, coins, silver, emeralds and other gems and jewellery and the personal wealth of the viceroy of Peru.

The ship, the San Jose, has been described as the holy grail of shipwrecks, carrying one of the richest treasure cargos ever to have been lost at sea.
The treasure was collected in the South American colonies to be shipped to Spain to help fund King Philip V’s war of succession against the British.
Santos said the treasure was now worth at least £662m, although other estimates have said it could run into billions.

courtesy of El Pais

The ship was sunk in 1708 in the Caribbean Sea close to the walled port city of Cartagena during heavy fighting with the British.
A team of international experts, the Colombian navy and the country’s archaeology institute discovered the wreck last week near the island of Baru.

Dr. Carla Rahn Phillips' estimation (inside the polygon) of the location of the Galeon San Jose - off Cartagena, Colombia (OSRI) In a follow-up statement, the presidency said the shipwreck was discoveredat a site “never mentioned in previous studies.”The
fate of the treasure has been the subject of a long-running legal
battle with U.S.-basedSea Search Armada, which claims its predecessor
found the wreckage in 1981.SSA has been claiming billions of dollars for breach of contract from the Colombian government, but in 2011 an American court ruled that the galleon was the property of the Colombian state.

zoom on the area with the GeoGarage platform (CIOH nautical charts)English Commodore Charles Wager tracked down the treasure-laden ship

25km (16 miles) off Cartagena and it sank in 200-300m of water.In the fighting the vessel was reported to have exploded, with most of its crew killed.

The president tweeted: “Great news! We have found the San Jose galleon.”
Later he went on television from Cartagena’s naval base and said: “Without a doubt, we have found, 307 years after it sank, the San Jose galleon. We will build a great museum here in Cartagena.”
He said the find “constitutes one of the greatest – if not the biggest, as some say – findings and identification of underwater heritage in the history of humanity.”

Ownership of the ship’s treasure has been the subject of a long-running legal dispute.
In 1981 an American-based salvage company, Sea Search Armada, said it had located the area where the ship sank.

Sidescan sonar view

The company and the government agreed to split any proceeds, but the government later said all treasure would belong to Colombia, a view that was backed by a US court in 2011.
The supreme court ruled that Colombia held the rights to items deemed to be “national cultural patrimony”.
Anything else would be halved between the salvage company and Colombia.

Sonar images have revealed bronze cannon made specifically for the ship, arms, ceramics and other artefacts, said the president.
The 150ft long ship with a beam of 45ft was armed with 64 guns.
Some 600 people went down with the vessel after it exploded when hit by fire from a British warship.
The wreck falls within the UN’s definition of an underwater cultural heritage site.
Archaeological excavation and scientific tests will continue to ensure it can be properly preserved, said the president.

Routes of the Spanish galeons

The San Jose was part of a Spanish fleet that sailed to the Americas to load up with gold, silver, emeralds and other precious stones and metals.
The British sought to capture them as a way to cut off Spain’s war finances.
Commodore Charles Wager, in command of four British ships including HMS Expedition, attacked the fleet off the island of Baru.
His plan had been to attack the largest ship, the San Jose, and take control of the crew and cargo.
However, as it was about to be captured it blew up and sank.
Wager described the close quarters broadsides, and said the San Jose exploded with such intensity that he could feel the heat from his own ship.
“I believe the ship’s side blew out, for she caused a sea that came in our ports,” he wrote.
“She immediately sank with all her riches.”

It is estimated that the San Jose is one of more than 1,000 galleons and merchant ships that sank along Colombia’s coral reefs over more than three centuries of colonial rule.